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Important Legal DisclaimerThis guide provides general educational information only and does not constitute legal, tax, insurance, or professional advice. Laws, regulations, and requirements vary significantly by state, locality, and individual circumstances.Before making any legal or business decisions:
  • Consult with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction
  • Work with a qualified insurance professional
  • Speak with a certified accountant or tax advisor
  • Verify current local, state, and federal requirements
CoachIQ and the authors of this guide assume no liability for actions taken based on this information. Your specific situation may require different approaches, protections, or compliance measures than those described here.When in doubt, always consult qualified professionals.

Overview

This comprehensive guide covers essential legal structure, insurance requirements, liability waivers, and risk management systems to protect your training facility before opening. You’ll learn which protections are non-negotiable, realistic costs, and how to implement protection systems without legal expertise or massive budgets.
What you’ll learn:
  • Business structure selection and formation
  • Insurance coverage requirements
  • Liability waiver creation and implementation
  • Risk management protocols
  • Common legal issues and prevention strategies

Who This Guide Is For

Coaches and trainers opening physical facilities who need straightforward legal guidance focused on practical implementation and real-world cost considerations.

Part 1: Business Structure

Timeline: Complete within first 30 days of planning

LLC: The Right Choice for Most Coaches

Why LLC Works for Training Facilities:
  • Liability protection: Personal assets shielded from business lawsuits and debts
  • Tax simplicity: Pass-through taxation (no double taxation)
  • Minimal paperwork: No board meetings or complex compliance requirements
  • Professional credibility: Legitimate business entity status
  • Flexibility: Works for single owners or partners with customizable profit distribution
Formation Costs:
  • State filing fee: $50-500
  • Registered agent (optional): $50-300 annually
  • Annual reports: $50-300 (state dependent)
1

Check business name availability

Visit your state’s Secretary of State website and verify your desired business name is available for registration.
Choose a name that’s unique, memorable, and reflects your training specialty. Avoid names too similar to existing businesses in your state.
2

File LLC formation documents

Complete and submit your Articles of Organization through your state’s online filing system.Required information typically includes:
  • Business name and address
  • Registered agent information
  • Management structure (member-managed or manager-managed)
  • Purpose of business
3

Obtain your EIN from the IRS

Apply for your Employer Identification Number (EIN) through the IRS website. This is free, completed online, and you’ll receive your EIN immediately.
Your EIN is essentially a social security number for your business. You’ll need it to open business bank accounts, hire employees, and file taxes.
4

Open a business bank account

Using your EIN and formation documents, open a dedicated business bank account. This separates personal and business finances—critical for liability protection and tax compliance.
Success! Your LLC is now operational and you have proper financial separation between personal and business activities.
Timeline: 2-3 weeks from start to finish
Brandon formed Pro Standard as an Indiana LLC through the state website for $100, establishing himself as the sole owner while offering his general manager profit sharing (a percentage of profits without ownership stake). Ongoing maintenance requires only annual state reports with minimal paperwork.

When to Consider S-Corporation Status

An S-Corporation is a tax election, not a separate business structure. You form an LLC first, then elect S-Corp tax treatment with the IRS. S-Corp Tax Benefits: You can pay yourself a “reasonable salary” (subject to employment taxes) and take remaining profits as distributions (not subject to employment taxes). Example savings: On 100Knetprofit,youcouldsaveapproximately100K net profit, you could save approximately 6,000 annually in self-employment taxes. Trade-Offs to Consider:
  • Payroll processing costs: $500-2,000 annually
  • Quarterly payroll tax filings required
  • Annual corporate tax return (more complex than LLC)
  • Accountant fees: $1,000-3,000 annually
  • Must pay yourself “reasonable” salary (IRS scrutinizes this)
S-Corp Sweet Spot: Generally makes sense at $60K+ annual net profit. Below that threshold, administrative costs typically exceed tax savings.
Implementation Strategy: Form your LLC first and operate profitably for 6-12 months. Once you’re consistently profitable above $60K, elect S-Corp status by filing Form 2553 with the IRS. You can make this election retroactive to January 1st if filed within the first 2.5 months of your tax year.

Business Structures to Avoid

Sole Proprietorship: Never for Physical FacilitiesOperating as a sole proprietor provides zero liability protection. Your personal assets—home, car, savings—are directly exposed to business lawsuits. If a client is injured and sues, they can pursue your personal property. This structure is never appropriate for facilities with physical injury risk.
General Partnership: Dangerous for Multi-Owner Facilities In a general partnership, all partners are equally liable for business debts and lawsuits. If your partner causes an injury through negligence, both of you can be sued and held responsible. Always use a multi-member LLC instead, which provides liability protection for all owners.
Remember: YOU are the owner. You can find and hire managers, but protect your ownership and personal assets through proper business structure.

State Selection for Formation

The Simple Rule: Form your LLC in the state where you physically operate your facility.
  • Operating in Indiana? Form an Indiana LLC.
  • Operating in Texas? Form a Texas LLC.
  • Operating in California? Form a California LLC.
Foreign LLC Registration (Usually Not Worth It): Some people suggest forming in states like Wyoming or Delaware for perceived benefits. However, if you form in Wyoming but operate in Indiana, you must:
  • Register as a “foreign LLC” in Indiana
  • Pay filing fees in both states
  • Maintain compliance in both states
  • File annual reports in both states
For single-location training facilities, the double fees and compliance burden rarely justify any potential benefits. Form in your operating state.

Part 2: Insurance Protection

Critical: Obtain insurance coverage BEFORE training your first client. Operating without insurance exposes you to catastrophic financial risk.

General Liability Insurance (Non-Negotiable)

General liability insurance is your primary protection against client injury claims and should be secured before opening your doors. What It Covers:
  • Client injuries occurring on your premises
  • Property damage you or your staff cause
  • Legal defense costs (even if claim is frivolous)
  • Medical payments regardless of fault
  • Product liability if you sell equipment or supplements
Minimum Coverage: 1Mperoccurrence/1M per occurrence / 2M aggregate
Recommended: 2Mperoccurrence/2M per occurrence / 4M aggregate (minimal premium difference)
Annual Cost: 1,5003,000for1,500-3,000 for 1M/$2M coverage Common Claims Scenarios:
Athlete trips over equipment left on the floor, parent slips on wet surface near entrance, client falls on stairs due to inadequate lighting.
Brandon obtained 1MgeneralliabilitycoveragethroughalocalIndianaagentforapproximately1M general liability coverage through a local Indiana agent for approximately 1,800 annually. He secured coverage after opening (taking significant risk—not recommended). Always get insurance before training your first client.
Professional liability insurance (also called Errors & Omissions) covers claims arising from your professional advice and instruction—a critical gap that general liability doesn’t cover. What It Covers:
  • Claims that your coaching or instruction caused injury
  • Allegations of negligent program design
  • Errors in training methodology or technique instruction
  • Failure to properly progress athletes
  • Claims of inadequate supervision during training
Why It’s Separate: General liability covers “accidents” (client slips and falls). Professional liability covers “professional negligence” (your coaching advice allegedly caused harm). Annual Cost: 8001,500Coverage:800-1,500 **Coverage**: 1-2M per claim When It’s Essential:
  • Teaching technical skills with injury risk (Olympic lifting, plyometrics)
  • Training athletes with previous injury history
  • Working with high-level competitive athletes
  • Providing any nutritional guidance or program design
  • Any activity beyond simply providing facility access
If you’re actively coaching (not just renting space), professional liability insurance provides critical protection for the advice and instruction you provide.

Property Insurance (Landlord Required)

Your landlord’s insurance only covers the building structure—not your business property. Property insurance protects your investment in equipment and improvements. What It Covers:
  • Your training equipment, computers, and furniture
  • Tenant improvements you made to the space
  • Business interruption if facility becomes unusable
  • Theft and vandalism of your property
  • Electronic equipment and data
Annual Cost: $800-2,000
Coverage: Based on replacement value of your property (not depreciated value)
Important: Your landlord’s insurance will never cover your contents. This is always a separate policy requirement and often a lease condition.
Coverage Calculation: Make a detailed inventory of all your property:
  • Training equipment (weights, machines, speed equipment)
  • Office equipment (computers, phones, tablets)
  • Furniture (desks, chairs, reception area)
  • Tenant improvements (flooring, mirrors, lighting you added)
Insure for full replacement cost, not what you paid originally.

Workers Compensation Insurance (Required for Employees)

Workers compensation insurance is legally required in most states once you hire W-2 employees and protects both you and your employees. What It Covers:
  • Employee medical expenses from work-related injuries
  • Lost wages during recovery period
  • Rehabilitation and physical therapy costs
  • Legal protection (employees generally cannot sue if receiving workers comp)
  • Disability benefits for permanent injuries
When Required: Most states mandate coverage with your first W-2 employee (independent contractors typically excluded) Annual Cost: $2,000-5,000+ depending on your state and total payroll
Penalties for Non-Compliance:
  • Criminal charges in some states
  • Massive fines (often $10,000+)
  • Personal liability for ALL medical costs
  • Inability to obtain future coverage
  • Potential business closure by state authorities
Brandon hired his general manager as an independent contractor (1099), allowing flexibility in management approach. Part-time coaches are W-2 employees who receive direct supervision. Workers compensation covers the W-2 employees only, costing approximately $2,000-3,000 annually.

How to Get Insurance

1

Find a specialized insurance broker

Work with brokers who specialize in sports, recreation, or fitness facilities. They understand your specific risks and coverage needs better than general commercial agents.Where to find specialized brokers:
  • Referrals from other facility owners in your area
  • Search “sports facility insurance [your state]”
  • Industry associations (USA Weightlifting, NSCA, local coaching organizations)
  • Online directories of sports insurance specialists
2

Request and compare 3-5 quotes

Get quotes from multiple brokers to compare coverage and pricing.What to compare:
  • Coverage limits (per occurrence and aggregate)
  • Exclusions (what’s NOT covered)
  • Annual premium costs
  • Deductibles
  • Payment options (monthly vs. annual)
  • Broker’s reputation for claims handling
3

Ask critical questions

Before purchasing, get clear answers to these essential questions:Critical questions to ask:
  • “What specific situations are NOT covered by this policy?”
  • “Does this cover camps or events I host at other locations?”
  • “Are independent contractors covered when working at my facility?”
  • “What’s my obligation if an incident occurs?” (reporting timeline)
  • “Can I pay monthly or is annual payment required?”
  • “What’s your average claim response time?”
  • “Are there any exclusions specific to my sport or training style?”
If a broker can’t clearly answer these questions or seems uncertain about coverage details, find a different broker. You need someone who truly understands your business.
4

Purchase coverage before opening

Secure all required coverage at least 2 weeks before your first client trains at your facility. This allows time for:
  • Certificate of insurance delivery (needed for lease)
  • Policy review to ensure accuracy
  • Questions or corrections with broker
  • Peace of mind on opening day
Success! You’re properly protected and can focus on training clients rather than worrying about catastrophic financial risk.
Total First-Year Insurance Budget: $5,000-8,000 for comprehensive coverage (general liability, professional liability, property, workers compensation)

Insurance Mistakes to Avoid

Critical Mistakes That Expose You to Serious Risk:1. Skipping Coverage Entirely One lawsuit judgment can easily exceed 500,000.Yourannual500,000. Your annual 2,000 premium is insignificant compared to this catastrophic risk. Many facilities have closed permanently after a single uninsured incident.2. Choosing the Cheapest Policy Without Review A dramatically lower premium almost always means excluded coverage. A $1,000 policy that doesn’t cover your primary activities is worthless when you need it most.3. Not Reading Policy Exclusions Your policy might specifically exclude your sport or training style. Review exclusions carefully and ask questions before purchasing.4. Delaying Workers Compensation Operating with W-2 employees without workers comp is illegal in most states. Penalties are severe—fines, criminal charges, and personal liability for all medical costs.5. Failing to Update Coverage as You Grow Added new equipment worth $50,000? Expanded services? Changed training methods? Notify your insurance broker immediately to ensure continued coverage.

Part 3: Liability Waivers

What Waivers Do (And Don’t Do)

Understanding the realistic protection waivers provide helps you implement them properly and maintain appropriate expectations. What Signed Waivers Provide:
  • Legal defense foundation if you’re sued (not a guarantee you’ll win)
  • Documented proof client understood inherent risks
  • Evidence client voluntarily chose to participate
  • Significant deterrent to frivolous lawsuits
  • Demonstration of your risk management diligence
What Waivers DON’T Provide:
  • Guaranteed immunity from all lawsuits
  • Protection against gross negligence or intentional harm
  • Replacement for proper insurance coverage
  • Consistent protection across all states (enforceability varies)
  • Protection if client proves they didn’t understand what they signed
The Bottom Line: Waivers are essential but work alongside insurance and safety protocols—not instead of them. Think of waivers as one layer in your comprehensive protection strategy.

Essential Waiver Components

A legally defensible waiver must include specific language and disclosures. Here are the critical components:

1. Clear Risk Disclosure

Explicitly list specific risks inherent to your training activities:
  • Sprains, strains, and muscle injuries
  • Fractures and broken bones
  • Concussions and head injuries
  • Contact with other participants or equipment
  • Overexertion and cardiovascular stress
  • Serious injury including permanent disability
  • Death (yes, this must be included)
Be specific to your sport. A baseball facility should mention balls, bats, and pitching injuries. A strength facility should mention weights, barbells, and lifting injuries.

2. Assumption of Risk

Client must acknowledge they understand these risks and voluntarily choose to participate anyway, with full knowledge of the dangers involved.

3. Release of Liability

Client agrees not to sue your facility, staff, or owners for injuries resulting from ordinary negligence (not gross negligence or intentional harm).

4. Indemnification Clause

Client agrees to cover your legal costs and damages if you’re sued because of their actions or if they bring a claim that violates the waiver.

5. Medical Representation

Client confirms they are physically capable of participating safely and have consulted their physician if they have any medical concerns.

6. Emergency Treatment Authorization

Permission to seek emergency medical care if the client becomes unable to consent to treatment during participation.

7. Photo/Video Release (Optional)

Permission to use participant images in marketing materials, social media, and promotional content. Make this optional with a separate checkbox.

8. Facility Rules & Code of Conduct

Agreement to follow all facility rules, policies, and staff instructions. Acknowledgment that you can remove them for violations without refund.

Waivers for Minors (Under 18)

Waivers for minors present unique legal challenges because minors cannot legally waive their own rights in most states. The Legal Challenge: Minors (under 18) cannot enter into binding contracts or waive their legal rights. Parents or legal guardians must sign on behalf of the minor. Critical Language Requirements:
  • “Parent/guardian signing on behalf of minor participant”
  • “Parent/guardian releases facility from liability for injuries to minor”
  • “Parent/guardian agrees not to sue on behalf of minor”
  • “Parent/guardian assumes all risks on minor’s behalf”
One Waiver Format: You can use a single waiver that works for both adults and minors. Simply ensure the signature line clearly states: “Participant Signature (if 18+) OR Parent/Guardian Signature (if participant under 18).”
State Variability: Some states limit parental ability to waive minors’ rights. This makes attorney review in your specific state absolutely essential.

Creating Your Waiver

You have two primary approaches to creating a legally sound waiver:
Don’t Skip Attorney ReviewWaiver enforceability varies significantly by state. Some states readily enforce waivers; others have strict limitations. A local attorney ensures your waiver complies with your state’s specific requirements and maximizes your legal protection. The $300-800 investment is insignificant compared to the protection it provides.
Brandon obtained his initial waiver from an industry mentor (zero cost), but strongly recommends investing in attorney review for anyone without this connection. His waiver covers injury risk disclosure, assumption of risk, release of liability, and photo release—all essential components. Every participant must sign before any training, camps, or events participation.

Collecting & Storing Waivers

How you collect and store waivers affects both convenience and legal protection. Advantages:
  • Integrate with your scheduling and payment system
  • Clients sign electronically before purchasing anything
  • Automatically stored and searchable
  • Can’t be lost or damaged
  • Instant access during emergencies or legal issues
  • Timestamped signature records
Implementation Options:
  • CoachIQ’s integrated waiver system
  • Dedicated waiver platforms (WaiverSign, Smartwaiver)
  • Electronic signature tools (DocuSign, HelloSign)
  • Custom website integration

Paper Backup System

Even with digital collection, maintain paper backup procedures: Organization:
  • File signed copies alphabetically by last name
  • Separate adult and minor waivers if helpful
  • Use clearly labeled file folders or binders
  • Store in secure, locked location
Retention Period:
  • Keep indefinitely (safest approach)
  • Minimum: statute of limitations in your state plus 2 years
  • Never destroy waivers from incidents resulting in injury
Brandon uses CoachIQ’s integrated waiver system, which prevents clients from purchasing sessions, memberships, or registering for events without completing the digital signature. Waivers are automatically stored in CoachIQ’s system, providing instant access when needed. The one-time signing approach covers all future participation—no annual renewal hassle for clients or staff.

When Clients Sign Waivers


Part 4: Client Service Agreements

Beyond liability waivers, you need clear business terms that govern the commercial relationship with clients.

Payment Terms

Essential Components: Pricing Structure:
  • Session rates, monthly memberships, or package pricing
  • Any setup or registration fees
  • Price changes and notification procedures
Payment Timing:
  • When payment is due (before service strongly recommended)
  • Accepted payment methods
  • Credit card on file requirements
  • Auto-pay enrollment and processing dates
Late Fees and Penalties:
  • Grace period (if any)
  • Late fee amount and when applied
  • Actions taken for non-payment (suspension, termination)
Best Practice: Require payment before providing services. Never train clients with outstanding balances. This prevents uncomfortable collection situations and ensures your time is compensated.

Cancellation & Refund Policy

Clear cancellation policies prevent disputes and set proper expectations from the start. Key Policy Elements: Advance Notice Requirements:
  • How much notice required for cancellation (2 hours, 24 hours, etc.)
  • How clients submit cancellations (app, text, phone)
  • Consequences for insufficient notice
Late Cancellation & No-Show Policies:
  • Late cancellation penalties (forfeit session, fee charged)
  • No-show forfeitures
  • Exceptions for emergencies (define what qualifies)
Refund Policy:
  • Refundable vs. non-refundable products
  • Partial refund conditions (if any)
  • Refund processing timeline
  • Unused credit expiration dates
Sample Policy Language: “Cancellations require 2+ hours advance notice. Late cancellations (less than 2 hours) forfeit the session credit. No-shows forfeit the session with no credit or refund. Monthly memberships are non-refundable but can be paused up to 2 months per year with 7 days advance notice.”
Brandon’s facility uses monthly auto-renewing memberships requiring payment before participation via saved credit cards in CoachIQ. His cancellation policy requires 2 hours notice for credit back. The stated policy is no refunds, but Brandon exercises discretion for genuine hardship situations to maintain goodwill while firmly enforcing the policy for “just because” requests.

Commitment Terms

Membership Duration:
  • Month-to-month vs. 3/6/12-month commitments
  • Auto-renewal provisions and client notification
  • Termination procedures and required notice
  • Early termination fees (if applicable)
Pause/Freeze Options:
  • How many pauses allowed per year
  • Maximum pause duration
  • Notice required to pause
  • Fees for pausing (if any)

Behavior Expectations & Code of Conduct

Establish clear behavioral standards to maintain a positive training environment. Essential Conduct Policies: Respect Requirements:
  • Respectful treatment of coaches, staff, and other participants
  • Appropriate language (no profanity, discrimination, harassment)
  • Proper equipment use and care
  • Following coach instructions and facility rules
Parent Conduct Policies (Youth Facilities):
  • Appropriate sideline behavior during training
  • No coaching from sidelines
  • Respect for coaching staff decisions
  • Communication protocols
Consequences for Violations:
  • Warning system (verbal warning, written warning)
  • Temporary suspension
  • Permanent removal from facility
  • No refunds for behavioral removals

Making Agreements Enforceable

Legal Requirements for Enforceable Contracts:
  • Clear language: No incomprehensible legalese that clients can’t understand
  • Reasonable terms: Not extremely one-sided or unconscionable
  • Proper signature and date: Client signs and dates the agreement
  • Client received copy: Provide signed copy to client immediately
  • Knowing agreement: Not buried in fine print or hidden
Best Practices for Enforcement:
  • Email clients their signed agreement copy immediately
  • Reference terms in your regular communications
  • Enforce consistently (don’t make exceptions that create precedent)
  • Document all policy violations and consequences
  • Update agreements when policies change (with client notice)
Consistency is Key: Once you make exceptions to your policies, those exceptions can become the expected standard. Be thoughtful about when and why you deviate from your stated terms.

Part 5: Risk Management Systems

Effective risk management goes beyond legal documents—it requires daily operational systems that prevent incidents before they occur.

Daily Safety Protocols

Daily Opening Checklist:
  • Check all training equipment for wear, damage, or malfunction
  • Verify nets, hoops, and padding are secure
  • Test machines and moving parts
  • Ensure safety equipment (pads, helmets) is functional
  • Inspect floors for wet spots, tears, or debris
  • Verify all lighting is functional
  • Ensure emergency exits are clear and accessible
  • Check restrooms for safety hazards
  • Verify first aid kit is stocked
  • Confirm AED is functional (if present)
  • Ensure emergency contact information is posted
  • Check fire extinguisher is accessible and inspected
Responsibility: Assign opening staff member to complete checklist before any clients arrive. Document completion in a log.
Why Documentation Matters: If an incident occurs, your documented daily safety checks prove your diligence and can be critical in your legal defense.

Equipment Maintenance Schedule

Weekly Maintenance:
  • Visual inspection of all equipment
  • Tighten loose bolts, screws, and connections
  • Clean and sanitize high-touch surfaces
  • Check equipment stability and placement
Monthly Maintenance:
  • Deep clean all equipment
  • Detailed inspection of wear points
  • Lubricate moving parts as needed
  • Test all electronic equipment
Quarterly Maintenance:
  • Professional servicing of complex equipment
  • Replace worn parts before failure
  • Update maintenance logs
  • Review incident reports for patterns
Annual Maintenance:
  • Comprehensive safety inspection by qualified professional
  • Major equipment servicing or replacement
  • Update manufacturer guidelines and protocols
  • Review and update maintenance procedures
Tag and Remove Broken Equipment ImmediatelyNever allow clients to use equipment “just this once” when you know it’s damaged or malfunctioning. Tag it clearly as “OUT OF SERVICE” and physically remove it from the training area. One injury from known-defective equipment dramatically weakens your legal defense.

Emergency Preparedness

Required Equipment:

First Aid Kit

Well-stocked, easily accessible location, staff trained in use, regularly inspected and restocked

AED (Recommended)

Automated External Defibrillator for cardiac emergencies, staff trained in use, registered with local EMS

Emergency Contacts

Posted prominently: 911, nearest hospital, poison control, utility companies, facility owner contact

Fire Extinguisher

Code required, proper type for facility, regularly inspected, staff trained in use
Written Emergency Action Plan: Your facility needs documented procedures for:
  • Medical emergencies and injury response
  • Fire emergencies and evacuation procedures
  • Severe weather and natural disasters
  • Security threats and active intruder situations
  • Utility failures (power, water, HVAC)
Staff Training Requirements:
  • CPR/First Aid certification: Highly recommended for all staff who supervise training
  • Emergency procedure review: Quarterly training sessions
  • Practice drills: Conduct annually minimum (fire, medical emergency, evacuation)
  • New staff onboarding: Complete emergency training before unsupervised shifts
Many local fire departments offer free fire safety training and will conduct facility inspections to help you identify hazards.

Incident Documentation

Document every incident that occurs at your facility, regardless of severity. Required Documentation for Every Incident:
1

Basic incident information

  • Date and time of incident
  • Exact location within facility
  • Names of all people involved
  • Witnesses present (names and contact info)
2

Detailed incident description

Write exactly what happened in factual terms:
  • What was the person doing?
  • How did the injury occur?
  • What equipment was involved?
  • Environmental conditions at the time
Write Facts, Not Opinions: Document what you observed, not what you think caused it. “Client fell while running” is factual. “Client was running too fast and lost control” is opinion.
3

Injury and response details

  • Description of visible injuries
  • First aid provided (by whom and what actions)
  • Whether EMS was called
  • Whether client went to hospital
  • Client’s condition when leaving facility
4

Follow-up and notification

  • Parent notification (if minor) - time and method
  • Insurance notification (if potentially serious)
  • Follow-up needed or scheduled
  • Any equipment taken out of service
Success! You have complete documentation that protects you legally and helps identify safety improvements.
Why Comprehensive Documentation Matters: If a lawsuit is filed months or years after an incident, your detailed contemporaneous records prove what actually happened versus what the plaintiff claims. Memory fades; documented facts remain. Insurance Notification Requirements:
Critical Timing: Report any potential claim to your insurance carrier within 24-48 hours. Most policies require notification within 30 days. Late reporting can void your coverage entirely—even if the claim is legitimate.

Medical Information Collection

Collect essential medical information from every client to ensure safe participation and proper emergency response. Required Information:
Minimum two emergency contacts with:
  • Full name and relationship to client
  • Phone number (mobile preferred)
  • Alternative contact method
  • Whether they have authority to make medical decisions
Any conditions that could affect safe participation:
  • Asthma, diabetes, heart conditions
  • Seizure disorders
  • Previous serious injuries (especially relevant to training)
  • Any condition requiring activity modification
  • Severe allergies (especially anaphylaxis risk)
  • Current medications
  • Location of emergency medication (EpiPen, inhaler)
  • Instructions for medication administration if needed
  • Primary care physician name
  • Physician phone number
  • Permission to contact physician if needed
  • Recent physical exam date (for competitive athletes)
Storage and Privacy Requirements:
HIPAA Compliance: Medical information must be kept confidential and secure. Limit staff access to only those who need it for safety purposes. Store paper forms in locked cabinets; digital records in password-protected systems.
Annual Updates: Medical conditions, medications, and emergency contacts change. Request updated information annually, typically at membership renewal or before each season.

Child Safety Protocols

Facilities serving minors must implement comprehensive child protection measures.

Background Checks (Non-Negotiable)

Minimum Required Screening:
  • Criminal background check
  • Sex offender registry check
  • Reference verification
Cost: $20-100 per person
Timeline: 3-7 business days typically
Legal Requirements: Many states mandate background checks for anyone working with minors. Verify your state’s specific requirements.
Before They Work With Kids: Complete background checks before staff members have any unsupervised contact with minors. No exceptions.

Visibility & Supervision Protocols

Critical Safety Measures:
  • No one-on-one behind closed doors: All coaching and training occurs in visible areas
  • Windows in offices: Private rooms need windows or open doors during sessions
  • Multiple staff present: Schedule overlapping shifts when possible
  • Security cameras throughout: Both safety tool and deterrent (post signs notifying of cameras)
Two-Deep Leadership: When possible, maintain at least two staff members present when working with groups of minors.

Check-In/Check-Out Procedures

Arrival Protocol:
  • Document who dropped off minor (name, relationship, time)
  • Verify authorized pickup list is current
  • Minor signs in or scans in
  • Photo ID on file for authorized adults
Departure Protocol:
  • Only release to authorized adults listed
  • Verify ID for unfamiliar adults
  • Document time and who picked up
  • Never allow minor to leave alone without written parent authorization
Digital Tracking: Use your management software (like CoachIQ) to automatically log arrival and departure times.

Communication Policies

Protect Staff and Athletes:
  • All coach-athlete communication through parents: No private messaging with minors
  • Team communication apps only: Use group platforms, never personal phone numbers
  • No social media direct messaging: Connect through official team/facility accounts only
  • Document all communications: Use systems that create automatic records
  • In-person conversations in visible areas: Never behind closed doors
Brandon requires comprehensive background checks for all staff members before they begin working with athletes. The facility has 24/7 security cameras throughout, providing both safety monitoring and liability protection. CoachIQ automatically tracks athlete check-in and check-out, creating a digital record of facility access.

Contractor vs. Employee Classification

Properly classifying workers is critical for legal compliance and affects your insurance, tax, and legal obligations.

Employee (W-2) Classification

Indicators Someone is an Employee:
  • You control when, where, and how they work
  • You provide training on your methods and procedures
  • You set their schedule and direct their daily activities
  • They work only for you during working hours
  • You provide tools, equipment, and work space
Your Legal Obligations:
  • Withhold income taxes and FICA
  • Pay employer portion of FICA
  • Provide workers compensation insurance
  • Pay unemployment insurance taxes
  • Comply with wage and hour laws

Independent Contractor (1099) Classification

Indicators Someone is a Contractor:
  • They control their own methods and schedule
  • They provide their own tools and equipment
  • They work for multiple clients simultaneously
  • They can make profit or loss on the work
  • They operate their own business
Your Legal Obligations:
  • Issue Form 1099-NEC if you pay $600+ annually
  • No tax withholding required
  • No workers compensation required
  • No unemployment insurance required
Misclassification ConsequencesClassifying employees as contractors to avoid taxes and insurance creates severe penalties:
  • IRS back taxes plus interest and penalties
  • State back taxes and penalties
  • Workers compensation violations and fines
  • Unemployment insurance liability
  • Employee lawsuits for benefits and protections
  • Potential criminal charges in extreme cases
When Uncertain: Classify as employee (the safer approach).
IRS and State Scrutiny: Tax authorities actively investigate worker classification, especially in industries (like fitness) where misclassification is common.
Brandon’s general manager operates as an independent contractor (1099), allowing flexibility in how he manages the facility and runs his own business operations. Part-time coaches are W-2 employees who receive direct supervision, follow scheduled shifts, and receive training on facility methods. This clear distinction ensures proper classification.

Understanding common legal challenges helps you prevent problems and respond appropriately when they arise.

Client Refund Disputes

Prevention Strategy:
  • State your refund policy clearly in your service agreement
  • Communicate the policy verbally before clients purchase
  • Require clients to acknowledge the policy (checkbox in registration)
  • No surprises after purchase
Resolution Process:
1

Review your policy

Does the client’s situation fall within any refund provisions you’ve established? Is there a legitimate reason the policy should apply?
2

Evaluate the situation

Consider:
  • Client’s reason for requesting refund
  • Whether it’s a genuine hardship vs. changed mind
  • Client’s history with your facility
  • Potential relationship damage vs. policy enforcement
3

Make your decision

Stand firm when: Client simply changed their mind, wants to try a competitor, didn’t read the clearly stated policy, would create negative precedentConsider flexibility when: Genuine documented hardship (medical, family emergency, job loss), your error in communication, maintaining relationship is valuable
Document your decision-making reasoning in case of future dispute or legal action.
4

Communicate clearly

Explain your decision with reference to your stated policy. If making an exception, clarify it’s discretionary and doesn’t change your policy.
Brandon enforces his no-refund policy firmly for “I just don’t want it anymore” requests, which sets clear expectations and prevents abuse. However, for genuine hardship situations (documented medical issues, family emergencies, job loss), he evaluates discretionary exceptions to maintain goodwill and positive reputation. All decisions are documented.

Injury Claims

When a client is injured at your facility, your immediate response is critical for both their wellbeing and your legal protection. Immediate Actions (First 24-48 Hours):
1

Provide appropriate care

  • Assess the injury severity
  • Provide first aid if trained and appropriate
  • Call 911 if serious or uncertain
  • Document exactly what care you provided
Never Admit Fault: You can be sympathetic (“I’m sorry you’re hurt”) without accepting liability (“It’s my fault”). Admitting fault can void your insurance coverage.
2

Document everything thoroughly

Complete your incident report immediately while details are fresh:
  • What happened (facts only)
  • Who was present
  • What care was provided
  • Witness statements
  • Photos if appropriate
3

Notify your insurance carrier

Call your insurance company within 24-48 hours for any injury that:
  • Required medical attention
  • Could potentially result in a claim
  • Involved significant pain or visible injury
  • The client expressed frustration or blame
Better Safe Than Sorry: Your insurance company would rather be notified of incidents that don’t become claims than not be notified of incidents that do.
4

Limit your communications

Do not discuss:
  • Who was at fault
  • What you think caused it
  • Your insurance coverage
  • Whether you’ll pay medical bills
Direct the client to your insurance company for all claim-related discussions.
What Your Insurance Company Handles:
  • Legal defense and attorney fees
  • Investigation of the incident
  • Communication with injured party
  • Negotiation of settlements
  • Payment of claims up to policy limits
Your Role in the Claims Process:
  • Provide complete documentation
  • Respond promptly to insurer requests
  • Do not communicate with plaintiff’s attorney (direct them to your insurer)
  • Continue normal operations (don’t make facility changes that imply previous fault)

When to Call an Attorney

Immediate Attorney Consultation Required:

Lawsuit Filed

Answer typically due within 20-30 days. Missing deadline results in automatic judgment against you.

Regulatory Investigation

OSHA, state agencies, discrimination complaints require immediate legal representation.

Serious Injury

Catastrophic injuries, permanent disability, or death require attorney involvement from the start.

Employee Issues

Discrimination charges, wrongful termination claims, wage disputes need specialized employment attorneys.
Attorney Consultation Appropriate:
  • Lease review before signing (essential)
  • Partnership or shareholder agreements
  • Employment contracts for key staff
  • Major contract negotiations ($50K+)
  • Complex client disputes threatening litigation
Probably Don’t Need Attorney:
  • Minor refund disputes ($500 or less)
  • Standard waiver creation (review yes, creation no)
  • Routine daily operations
  • General business questions (ask your CPA)
How to Find the Right Attorney:
  • Sports law specialists for facility-specific issues
  • Local business attorneys for general matters
  • Referrals from other facility owners
  • State bar association referral services
  • Industry association recommendations
Establish Relationship Before Crisis: Meet with a sports law attorney when you’re opening, not when you’re being sued. Having an established relationship means faster response when problems arise.

Part 7: Implementation Timeline & Costs

Pre-Opening Timeline (60-90 Days)

1

Month 1: Business formation

Tasks:
  • Research and select business structure (LLC recommended)
  • Check business name availability
  • File formation documents with your state
  • Obtain your EIN from the IRS (free, immediate)
  • Open business bank account with EIN
  • Apply for required business licenses
Costs:
  • LLC filing fee: $100-500
  • Business licenses: $50-500
  • Bank account: $0-50 (initial deposit)
Timeline: Weeks 1-4
2

Month 2: Insurance coverage

Tasks:
  • Research specialized insurance brokers
  • Request quotes from 3-5 brokers
  • Compare coverage, exclusions, and costs
  • Ask critical questions about coverage gaps
  • Purchase general liability insurance
  • Purchase property insurance
  • Purchase professional liability insurance
  • Set up workers compensation (if hiring W-2 employees)
Costs:
  • General liability: $1,500-3,000/year
  • Property: $800-2,000/year
  • Professional liability: $800-1,500/year
  • Workers comp: $2,000-5,000/year (if hiring)
Timeline: Weeks 4-8
Get insurance quotes before finalizing your lease—some landlords have specific coverage requirements.
3

Month 2-3: Legal documents

Tasks:
  • Create or obtain waiver template
  • Have attorney review waiver for your state
  • Draft client service agreement
  • Create incident report form template
  • Develop written emergency action plan
  • Have attorney review your lease before signing
Costs:
  • Waiver attorney review: $300-800
  • Lease review: $500-1,000
  • Service agreement review: $300-500
  • Emergency plan template: $0-200
Timeline: Weeks 6-10
4

Month 3: Operational systems

Tasks:
  • Integrate waivers into booking/payment system
  • Set up medical information collection
  • Create daily safety checklist
  • Install security cameras
  • Stock first aid kits
  • Post emergency contact information
  • Create equipment maintenance schedules
  • Set up incident documentation system
Costs:
  • Security cameras: $500-2,000
  • First aid supplies: $100-300
  • Signage and posting: $100-300
Timeline: Weeks 8-12
5

Before first client

Final verification tasks:
  • Confirm insurance is active and you have certificates
  • Test waiver collection system
  • Complete background checks for all staff
  • Train staff on emergency procedures
  • Conduct practice emergency drill
  • Verify all signage posted
  • Complete first daily safety inspection
Success! Your facility is legally protected and ready to welcome clients safely.

Total Cost Summary

First-Year Setup Costs

  • LLC formation: $100-500
  • Business licenses: $50-500
  • Subtotal: $150-1,000
  • General liability: $1,500-3,000
  • Property insurance: $800-2,000
  • Professional liability: $800-1,500
  • Workers compensation: $2,000-5,000 (if hiring)
  • Subtotal: $5,100-11,500
  • Security cameras: $500-2,000
  • First aid supplies: $100-300
  • Signage: $100-300
  • Background checks: $20-100 per staff member
  • Subtotal: $800-3,000
Total First Year: $7,650-18,800 Realistic Budget for Most Facilities: $10,000-13,000

Annual Ongoing Costs

After your first year, ongoing costs primarily consist of insurance renewals and maintenance:
  • Insurance renewals: $5,100-11,500
  • Annual state reports: $50-500
  • Attorney consultations: $500-2,000 (as needed)
  • Background checks: $20-100 per new hire
  • License renewals: $50-300
Total Annual Ongoing: $5,700-14,400 Realistic Annual Budget: $7,000-9,000
Brandon’s actual first-year costs (Indiana facility, 2023):
  • LLC formation: $100
  • Business licenses: ~$200
  • General liability insurance: $1,800
  • Lease attorney review: ~$750
  • Waiver cost: 0(obtainedfrommentorwouldtypicallybe0 (obtained from mentor—would typically be 500-800)
  • Security cameras: ~$1,200
  • Misc. supplies: ~$400
Total first year: ~$4,450Note: Brandon’s costs were below average due to industry connections providing templates and guidance. Budget $8,000-12,000 for a more typical experience without these connections.

Part 8: Critical Mistakes to Avoid

These mistakes have closed facilities and bankrupted owners. Learn from their experiences:

1. Operating Without Insurance

The Mistake: Thinking “it won’t happen to me” and operating without proper insurance coverage to save premium costs.The Reality: A single serious injury lawsuit can result in judgments of $500,000+. Without insurance, you’re personally liable for this entire amount, which can mean losing your home, savings, and business.The Solution: Secure minimum 1M/1M/2M general liability before your first client. This $1,500-3,000 annual investment protects against catastrophic financial ruin.

2. No Signed Waivers

The Mistake: Allowing clients to participate before completing waivers, having waivers available but not requiring signatures, or using verbal agreements instead of written waivers.The Reality: Without a signed waiver, you have no documented proof that clients understood and assumed the inherent risks. Your legal defense is dramatically weakened, and you may be personally liable even for injuries from risks clients should have expected.The Solution: Build waiver signing into your registration process—make it impossible to bypass. Digital systems like CoachIQ prevent purchase/registration without waiver completion.

3. Generic or Unreviewed Waivers

The Mistake: Downloading a generic waiver template from the internet and using it without attorney review in your state.The Reality: Waiver enforceability varies dramatically by state. A waiver that’s enforceable in California may be worthless in New York. Generic waivers often miss state-specific requirements or include unenforceable provisions.The Solution: Invest $300-800 in local attorney review of your waiver. They’ll ensure it complies with your state’s specific requirements and case law.

4. Sole Proprietorship Structure

The Mistake: Operating your facility as a sole proprietor to avoid formation costs and paperwork.The Reality: As a sole proprietor, there’s no legal separation between you and your business. When your business is sued, your personal assets (home, car, savings, retirement accounts) are directly at risk.The Solution: Form an LLC before opening. The $100-500 formation cost provides invaluable personal asset protection.

5. Misclassifying Employees as Contractors

The Mistake: Treating coaches and staff as independent contractors (1099) when they’re actually employees (W-2) to avoid payroll taxes and workers compensation costs.The Reality: IRS and state agencies actively pursue misclassification cases. Penalties include back taxes plus interest, substantial fines, workers compensation violations, and potential employee lawsuits for benefits and protections.The Solution: When uncertain about classification, treat workers as employees. The administrative costs of proper classification are far less than misclassification penalties.

6. No Incident Documentation

The Mistake: Failing to document injuries and incidents because they seem minor or clients say they’re “fine.”The Reality: Lawsuits can be filed months or years after incidents. Without contemporaneous documentation, it’s your memory against the plaintiff’s version of events. Judges and juries believe documented facts over undocumented memories.The Solution: Document every incident immediately, no matter how minor. Use a standard incident report form and complete it the same day the incident occurs.

7. Signing Lease Without Attorney Review

The Mistake: Signing a commercial lease without having an attorney review it to save $500-1,000 in legal fees.The Reality: Commercial leases are complex legal documents heavily favoring landlords. Hidden provisions can cost you tens of thousands: personal guarantees making you liable beyond your business, expensive maintenance obligations, renewal terms that trap you, or early termination penalties.The Solution: Always have a business attorney review your lease before signing. The 5001,000investmentfrequentlysaves500-1,000 investment frequently saves 50,000+ in problems and provides negotiating leverage.

8. Skipping Background Checks

The Mistake: Hiring staff to work with minors without completing criminal background checks to save $20-100 per person.The Reality: Many states legally require background checks for anyone working with minors. Beyond legal compliance, hiring someone with a concerning history who harms a child creates catastrophic liability. Your facility could be held liable for negligent hiring.The Solution: Complete criminal background and sex offender registry checks for all staff before they work with minors. This is non-negotiable.

9. Verbal Agreements Without Written Documentation

The Mistake: Making verbal agreements with clients, staff, or partners about important terms, thinking a handshake and trust are sufficient.The Reality: Verbal promises are essentially worthless in legal disputes. Without written documentation, it becomes one person’s word against another’s. Memories fade, people remember things differently, and relationships change.The Solution: Document everything in writing: employment terms, client agreements, partnership arrangements, significant decisions. “Get it in writing” should be your default approach.

10. No Emergency Action Plan

The Mistake: Thinking you’ll figure out emergency response “if something happens” rather than creating and practicing a written emergency plan.The Reality: Emergencies require immediate, coordinated response. Without a plan and training, staff freeze, make wrong decisions, or take actions that worsen the situation. This puts lives at risk and dramatically increases liability.The Solution: Create a written emergency action plan covering medical emergencies, fire, severe weather, and security threats. Train all staff and conduct practice drills at least annually.

Key Takeaways

Form LLC Before Opening

Investment: $100-500Shield your personal assets from business liability. Form before signing your lease or training any clients. Your home and savings depend on this protection.

Insurance is Non-Negotiable

Budget: $5,000-8,000 annuallyMinimum 1M/1M/2M general liability before first client. Add professional liability and property insurance. Workers comp required when hiring W-2 employees.

Every Client Signs Waiver

Investment: $300-800 for attorney reviewAttorney-reviewed waiver required before any participation. Provides legal defense foundation (not immunity). Build into registration process to ensure compliance.

Document Everything

Time: 10-15 minutes per incidentComplete incident reports, maintenance logs, and communication records. Your paper trail is your legal protection. If it’s not documented, legally it didn’t happen.

Proper Employee Classification

Critical: Get it right from day oneUnderstand W-2 vs. 1099 requirements. Misclassification creates massive penalties including back taxes, fines, and workers comp violations. When uncertain, classify as employee.

Attorney Review for Major Commitments

Investment: 5001,000lease,500-1,000 lease, 300-800 waiverAlways have an attorney review your lease before signing. Review waivers for your specific state. These investments prevent expensive problems and strengthen your legal position.

Background Checks Essential

Cost: $20-100 per personRequired for all staff working with minors in most states. Legal requirement and moral imperative. Protects children and shields you from negligent hiring liability.

Emergency Preparedness Required

Time: 2-3 hours initial setupWritten emergency action plan, trained staff, proper equipment (first aid, AED). Non-negotiable for both safety and liability protection. Practice drills annually minimum.

Clear Communication Prevents Disputes

Best Practice: Document all policiesState policies before purchase, provide written agreements, avoid surprises. Document reasoning for decisions. Clear communication reduces refund disputes and sets proper expectations.

Annual Review and Updates

Frequency: Annually minimumReview insurance coverage, update legal documents, adjust policies as needed, train staff on changes. Legal protection is ongoing, not one-time setup.

Conclusion

Legal protection isn’t paranoia—it’s fundamental to smart business operation. A systematic approach to business structure, insurance coverage, liability waivers, and safety protocols allows you to coach confidently, knowing you’ve protected your business, your clients, and your personal assets. Your implementation path:
  1. Immediate (Before opening): Form LLC, obtain insurance, create attorney-reviewed waiver
  2. First 30 days: Integrate systems, train staff, establish protocols
  3. Ongoing: Document everything, maintain equipment, update as needed
  4. Annual: Review coverage, update documents, train staff
Follow this framework, adapt it to your state’s requirements, and consult qualified professionals when needed. Your facility’s long-term success depends on a solid legal foundation as much as coaching excellence.
Questions or need clarification? While this guide provides comprehensive information, every facility’s situation is unique. Consult with licensed attorneys, insurance professionals, and accountants in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your circumstances.

Document Version: This guide provides general information current as of the publication date. Laws, regulations, and requirements change regularly. Always verify current requirements with qualified professionals in your jurisdiction before making decisions affecting your business.